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by graylights
4421 days ago
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Yes, a lot of high school subjects focus on the results rather then the process. Community colleges are also guilty. It's not just contained to math and science but even the arts and philosophy. It's a part of the prevailing attitude "Everyone should go to college." High schools focus on rote learning instead of critical thinking to improve their chances of admission to a good college. Then those same colleges frown on those mechanical methods. The worst part is we're training people to be spoonfed knowledge rather then seek it. |
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If you want an education in math, you don't memorize multiplication tables, just use a calculator. If you want training in math, you don't talk about applications and word problems and proofs, you memorize certain symbolic manipulations.
If people learned programming like they were taught math, they would be forbidden from knowing the concept of a quicksort exists until they successfully memorized and recited a 3SAT proof, "just because". It would be interesting to ace an automata theory class before writing your first line of code. Probably not required, and probably not a good idea, but it would be interesting.
You can educate a kid about what a derivative is in grade school as soon as they can slap a ruler up against a graph, what maybe 2nd grade or so? But you can't train them what a derivative is until mid to late high school, at least post-geometry and post-algebra (and some aspects of 1st year calc require a post-trig background, but not all)
This is aside from the meta issue that math is usually weaponized into a tool of filtration, because anyone can master it given enough innate skill or sweaty effort, so it seems "fair" to use for filtration. If you eliminate its usefulness as a filtration system, that doesn't mean as a culture we're not going to filter, it just means we're going to torture undergrad aged kids by filtering them on a new criteria, perhaps how well they've memorized historical names and dates, or how well they've memorized geographic maps, or how well they've memorized the bones of the human body or the electron configurations of the periodic table.